Fact: Facial Pain Patients “Feel” Our Feelings

Feelings hurt. Facial pain patients have long known that emotions play a part in the variability and severity of facial pain. If asked, many would tell you that their pain is emotionally upsetting and that stress makes their pain worse. This can throw a patient into a vicious cycle of stress causing increased pain, which causes more stress, which causes more pain, which causes more stress, and so on. Researchers at Duke University recently discovered evidence substantiating the relationship between facial pain and emotions when they identified a neurological mechanism that is unique to pain mediated by the craniofacial nerves.

“The team found that sensory neurons that serve the head and face are wired directly into one of the brain’s principal emotional signaling hubs. Sensory neurons elsewhere in the body are also connected to this hub, but only indirectly.”

They theorize this is the reason that people with facial pain truly “feel” their feelings. This may seem like little more than scientific confirmation of something we already instinctively knew, but the actual implications of this discovery go well beyond that.

“The results may pave the way toward more effective treatments for pain mediated by the craniofacial nerve, such as chronic headaches and neuropathic face pain.”

Search Face Facts

The Facial Pain Advocacy Alliance does not host or receive funding from advertising from physicians, medical practices, or sellers of facial pain related products. The advertisements seen on this website are placed by Google and are based on your browsing history.

The information provided on this website is meant to complement and not replace any advice or information from a health professional.

Last modified, 07/17.

Face Facts is owned and operated by
The Facial Pain Advocacy Alliance, a 501(c)3 nonprofit enterprise.info@face-facts.org.